Fichadiya Akash, Bertram Karri L, Ren Guomin, Yates Robin M, Krawetz Roman J
McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health, University of Calgary, Cummings School of Medicine, Calgary, Canada.
Department of Comparative Biology and Experimental Medicine, University of Calgary, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Calgary, Canada.
J Inflamm (Lond). 2016 Apr 6;13:12. doi: 10.1186/s12950-016-0120-9. eCollection 2016.
Resident macrophages in OA synovial tissue contribute to synovitis through pro-inflammatory mediators driving cartilage loss. What remains unknown is how these macrophages interact with synovial mesenchymal progenitor cells (sMPCs) in the joint. sMPCs have the potential to undergo chondrogenesis, but for yet unknown reasons, this ability is decreased in OA patients. In this study, we sought to identify if alteration of macrophage activity regulates the chondrogenic capacity of sMPCs.
An explant model was developed using human synovium obtained from normal individuals and OA patients. These explants were subjected to macrophage depletion and/or cytokine stimulation in order to regulate/deplete the residing macrophage population. Supernatant was collected following a 12-day treatment phase and subjected to inflammatory secretome analysis. sMPCs from the explants were subsequently placed under 21-day chondrogenic differentiation and levels of type II collagen (Col2a), Aggrecan (Acan), and Sox9 gene expression was quantified.
Inflammatory secretome analysis from OA patients revealed the presence of pro-inflammatory analytes following pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine stimulation and/or macrophage depletion. Additionally, chondrogenic differentiation of sMPCs was heterogeneously impacted across all OA patients following pro-/anti-inflammatory cytokine stimulation and/or macrophage depletion.
Tissue resident synovial macrophages can regulate the chondrogenic differentiation of sMPCs after cytokine stimulation in a patient specific manner. The secretion profile of OA synovium was also responsive to cytokine stimulation and/or macrophage depletion as observed by the largely pro-inflammatory milieu upregulated following cytokine stimulation.
骨关节炎(OA)滑膜组织中的驻留巨噬细胞通过驱动软骨丢失的促炎介质导致滑膜炎。尚不清楚的是这些巨噬细胞如何与关节中的滑膜间充质祖细胞(sMPCs)相互作用。sMPCs具有软骨形成的潜力,但由于未知原因,OA患者的这种能力会下降。在本研究中,我们试图确定巨噬细胞活性的改变是否调节sMPCs的软骨形成能力。
使用从正常个体和OA患者获得的人滑膜建立外植体模型。对这些外植体进行巨噬细胞清除和/或细胞因子刺激,以调节/清除驻留的巨噬细胞群体。在12天的治疗阶段后收集上清液,并进行炎症分泌组分析。随后将外植体中的sMPCs置于21天的软骨形成分化条件下,并对II型胶原蛋白(Col2a)、聚集蛋白聚糖(Acan)和Sox9基因表达水平进行定量。
对OA患者的炎症分泌组分析显示,在促炎和抗炎细胞因子刺激和/或巨噬细胞清除后存在促炎分析物。此外,在促炎/抗炎细胞因子刺激和/或巨噬细胞清除后,所有OA患者的sMPCs软骨形成分化均受到异质性影响。
组织驻留的滑膜巨噬细胞可在细胞因子刺激后以患者特异性方式调节sMPCs的软骨形成分化。如细胞因子刺激后观察到的大量促炎环境上调所示,OA滑膜的分泌谱也对细胞因子刺激和/或巨噬细胞清除有反应。